Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian Wins AMECYS 2020 Book Award

The Association of Middle East Children and Youth Studies (AMECYS) awards Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian’s Incarcerated Childhood and the Politics of Unchilding (Cambridge 2019) its book award.

In its award announcement, the AMECY committee notes the book’s significant contribution to understanding how children are used as political capital by those in power in society.  The committee writes, “Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, as an academic and activist living and working in East Jerusalem is not a distanced observer of the society she is studying but an engaged participant with a commitment to witnessing and sharing the experiences of Palestinians in Israel, and of Palestinian children in particular.” The committee lauds the book’s contribution “both to the academic literature on children and childhood in the Middle East and to an engaged and activist politics of the present.”  

You can listen to an interview with Professor Shalhoub-Kevorkian on her book  here.

Arab normalisation is another attempt to defeat the Palestinians psychologically

Dr. Samah Jabr
September 24, 2020 at 11:57 am | Published in

Middle East Monitor

Last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and foreign ministers representing the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain signed the “Abraham Accords Peace Agreement” in Washington DC which normalises their relations at the expense of Palestinian national and human rights. US President Donald Trump hosted the ceremony and has claimed that these deals are just the beginning and that there will be other countries making similar agreements very soon, ending Israel’s isolation in the region and thereby excluding the Palestinians.

The Arab League refused to back the Palestinians and voted down a resolution denouncing the normalisation deals. Earlier, Jared Kushner, Trump’s senior advisor and son-in-law, had toured the Middle East to meet with Arab leaders, even those in post-revolution Sudan, which had been promised an end to sanctions and removal from the list of terrorist states if it follows in the UAE’s footsteps. By seeking to buy more friends in support of the Israeli occupation and boost his record of achievements, Kushner hopes to deliver more votes to “Trump the peace broker” just in time for the US presidential election in November, all at the expense of the Palestinians.

In order to reduce the cognitive dissonance for the Arab masses, this political process has been synchronised with a public relations and social media campaign promoting a “fascination with Israel”. Supporting this effort is the broadcast of stories and films in Arabic celebrating the humanity, beauty and progressive nature of Israel. This discourse completely deletes the Palestinian narrative and the undisputable suffering of the people over many decades. Indeed, it is a campaign that smears the reputation of the people of Palestine, denies Israel’s brutal occupation and asserts that Palestinians willingly sold their lands and homes to the Zionist state. This fake narrative asserts that the Palestinians and their complaints are a drain on the Arab world and promotes the hash tag #Palestine is not my cause. All of this is taking place while Israel is demolishing Palestinian homes, killing unarmed Palestinian civilians and arresting Palestinian children in the midst of both normalisation with Arab states and the Covid-19 pandemic.

READ: Palestine says 100,000 virus swabs damaged by Israel

All Palestinian political parties have condemned the US-brokered accords as a “stab in the back”. The Palestinian Prime Minister described them as “black day in the sad calendar” of Palestinian history. They are indeed another attempt to defeat the Palestinians psychologically.

The Palestinian people are undoubtedly outraged by the normalising Arab states and the helplessness of their own representatives. I’ve seen Palestinians weeping in the streets at seeing the flags of the normalisation countries projected on the walls of Jerusalem. They view the deals as a treacherous betrayal of the Palestinian cause and a belittling of Palestinian and Arab sacrifices over many decades.

I understand that the Palestinian Authority is not against normalisation in principle, but is, rather, against a process of “normalisation” that excludes them as participants. It is one of the ironies of the current process that the Palestinian representatives during the Oslo years have paved the way for Arab leaders to move towards their own normalisation with Israel. Moreover, the PA apprehends that the current normalisation prepares the way for Mohammed Dahlan to replace his adversary Mahmoud Abbas as PA President, being a loyal ally of the US, the UAE and Israel.

Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas in New York, US on 11 February 2020 [Tayfun Coşkun/Anadolu Agency]

The official call for a “day of rage” on 15 September was not observed by many Palestinians, since many people are fatigued by political hypocrisy and doubt that public mobilisation has much impact on the regional and international world order. Over the Oslo decades, Palestinian representatives — through both conscious and unconscious motivations of their own — have weakened community resilience within Palestine substantially. Legitimate Palestinian resistance was undermined by the absence of democratic processes. Now the Palestinian representatives appear to have recognised that they are powerless within international politics and, as a result, are attempting to revive a Palestinian revolutionary discourse as a means of hiding behind the spirit of the ordinary people.

The very name “Abraham Accords” is misleading and masks the colonial nature of Israel’s occupation of Palestine. By presenting it as a religious conflict between the “Abrahamic faiths”, Israel erases the political rights of the Palestinians; the occupation is hidden beneath the notion that conflict resolution is about interfaith understanding. The reality is that the enemies of democracy and human rights in the Arab world are realigning themselves in a coalition that tramples Palestinian rights. In doing so, they are destroying the Palestinians’ future by withdrawing support from within the Arab world. This process undermines the cultural connection between Palestine and the larger geographical and historical context. Palestinians already feel like orphans; the new normalisation only adds to their sense of abandonment by the bigger “Arab brothers”.

READ: This is what the Palestinians need to do to confront Arab normalisation

The ongoing discussion involving yet more Arab countries preparing to announce normalisation with Israel is even more damaging and confusing for Palestine. The Palestinian experience has some parallels with a woman enduring a mass sexual assault; that the crime is done under the protective cover of the group makes the experience even more psychologically damaging.

Nevertheless, let Israel toast its new friends among Arab dictators and enjoy the blessings of the Arab League in the knowledge that these “representatives” do not actually represent anyone, least of all the Arab people. The masses, in fact, remain loyal to Palestine, but are exploited by their regimes that are willing to betray both them and Palestine in return for political and military support from Israel and the US.

When all is said and done, Israel must still deal with Palestinians resisting the occupation at the nominal border fence surrounding the Gaza Strip; at the Dheisheh Refugee Camp in the occupied West Bank; among the Eisaweyeh Jerusalemites; and with others who remain undefeated psychologically. These people and places will remind the Israelis of their unfinished business with Palestinians and the decades of their exploitation of the people and the land. Palestinians have been fighting for their national and human rights for generations and will continue to do so. In a struggle which now takes the shape of a US-European backed but Israeli-led invasion of the Arab world, Palestine remains on the front line in the struggle for justice.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

يدعو متحف فرويد جميع الأخصائيين الفلسطينيين حضور مؤتمره مجانا

 يتشرف متحف فرويد،  لندن دعوة أي فلسطيني متخصص بالطب النفسي حضور مؤتمر المتحف مجانا كضيف للدكتور مارتن كمب. 

لمن يود الحضور الرجاء مراسله الدكتور كمب على

Martin.kemp59@gmail.com 

تاريخ المؤتمر

١٩ و ٢٠ ايلول ٢٠٢٠

٢٦ و ٢٧ ايلول٢٠٢٠ 

عنوان المؤتمر 

Psychoanalysis and the Public Sphere: Social Fault Lines

للمزيد من المعلومات عن المؤتمر الرجاء زياره موقع المؤتمر

هنا 

Recording of Cafe Palestine: Violence against Palestinian Women - an intersectional struggle

The seventh Cafe Palestine from Nazareth on 11 July featured feminist peace activist, writer and editor Nabila Espanioly speaking about domestic violence within the framework of intersectional struggle could be found here

The Cafe opened with live music from from Gaza organised with featuring a father and daughter duo, Mohammed and Reema Al-Habbash playing oud and qanun. The music at Cafe Palestine is supported by PalMusic UK. PalMusic is currently running an appeal in support of the Edward Said National Conservatory for Music located in Palestine. You can support the appeal here:
https://www.palmusic.org.uk/palmusic-uk-urgent-appeal/

PalMusic are also organising an online concert with 3 Palestinian musicians and a panel discussion "Navigating Isolation Through Music" on Sunday 26 July. More details are available in the attached flyer. More info is available here:
www.tinyurl.com/palmusic1

Resisting Occupation and Pandemic: mental health in Palestine now.

For original article visit https://mondoweiss.net/2020/07/the-twin-challenges-to-palestinian-mental-health-of-occupation-and-pandemic/ 

On June 25, 2020, the Jewish Voice for Peace Health Advisory Council cohosted with founding members of the Palestine-Global Mental Health Network a webinar titled “Resisting Occupation and Pandemic: Mental Health in Palestine Now.” The panel was moderated by Lama Khouri,  a psychotherapist working with children and adults in New York and featured Samah Jabr, a psychiatrist practicing in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, Yasser Abu Jamei, Director general of the Gaza Community Mental Health Programme, and Manal Abu Haq, a clinical social worker and psychoanalytic psychotherapist working in Ramleh, Historic Palestine.

The presentations focused first on the realities of the corona virus pandemic for Palestinians, the lack of functioning well-funded health institutions (with adequate beds, staff, medication, ICU beds, ventilators, etc.) surviving under occupation and siege, the lack of adequate testing, the challenges facing populations with high levels of poverty, lack of water and electricity, and crowded living conditions where social distancing is a challenge.  

There is the added vulnerability of Palestinians living with high levels of diabetes, hypertension, obesity, anxiety and depression, and in Gaza the level of Israeli aggression and over 30,000 wounded Gazans recovering from the Great March of Return. Palestinians with Israeli citizenship face a host of challenges related to their second class status within a racist Israeli society and the unequal distribution of resources by Israeli authorities. 

This has all been heightened by the cut-off by the Trump administration of US aid to UNRWA and the WHO, by the thousands of Palestinian laborers working in Israel and bringing the virus home, the thousands languishing in Israeli prisons, and by the almost total inability of Gazans to obtain health care outside of the Strip.

Palestinians have been protected by being a relatively young population and by the strong social ties and family bonds that characterize Palestinian society. Ironically Gaza has been protected by being almost hermetically sealed from the rest of the world. Therapists face the challenge of dealing with similar issues (anxiety, depression, panic, and post-traumatic stress disorder-although it is never really post) as their patients face, and by the inability to establish a safe space in a place that is inherently unsafe.

The Palestinian Ministry of Health (MoH) has been active in establishing testing, quarantines, and educating the public and providing an important mental health response to the pandemic along with other NGOs in accordance with WHO and international standards. The MoH realized quickly that prevention and emotional support was critical because of the limited availability of tertiary care and general resources.

There is, nonetheless, much to be done. Dr. Jabr wrote, “Athough Palestinians have survived previous episodes of collective anxiety, restriction of liberties, uncertainty, and loss, the pandemic uncovers a historically-neglected mental health system which is currently facing a double struggle of COVID-19 and the ongoing Israeli occupation. Yet, this crisis can be used as an opportunity to correct the wrongs and advocate for strengthening the mental health system in Palestine.” 

Here are some links recommended by the panelists:

Recording of Cafe Palestine Five In Dialogue with Rana Nashashibi: A Palestinian Perspective on International Solidarity

Rana Nashashibi is probably best known overseas as the Director of the Palestine Counselling Centre. She is speaking to us as a founder member of the Palestine Global Mental Health Network. However, her role as clinician, writer, lecturer (at Birzeit University for over twenty years), as a leader in the women’s movement and as community activist, is too rich and varied to summarise here.
For further information: http://www.csap.cam.ac.uk/network/rana-nashashibi/

The Cafe will open with live music from 3.45pm (UK time) / 5.45pm (Palestine time) organised with PalMusic UK.
Rana Nashashibi will speak at 4pm (UK time) / 6pm (Palestine time).

This is a special event linking up with Palestine Global and USA MH Networks.

NOTE change of time:  3.45pm (London) 5.45pm (Palestine)
10.45am (New York) 7.45am (Los Angeles).

1.    Recording of Café Palestine Four with Dr Yoa’d Ghanadry-Hakim
We apologise to those who were unable to get into this café event: we quickly reached 100 participants, which was the maximum. From now on we will be able to include a much larger number, and this problem should not happen again.If case you missed our last event, here is a link to a recording of Dr Yoa’d Ghanadry-Hakim, and her contribution to the critique of mainstream perceptions of trauma, with an insistence that the findings of Palestinian clinicians and researchers are integrated into clinical thinking.https://ukpalmhn.com/resources/cafe-palestine/

Recording of Café Palestine Four with Dr Yoa’d Ghanadry-Hakim

June 1, 2020ukpalmhnadmin

Cafe Palestine is a series of fortnightly, hour-long presentations and discussions with mental health practitioners based in Palestine and involving participants world-wide.  If you would like to receive regular updates about forthcoming events and the availability of recordings, please join our mailing list.

Recording of Cafe Palestine 4

If you would like to receive regular updates aboutCafe Palestine then

The recording of the most recent Cafe Palestine is now available featuring Yoa’d Ghanadry-Hakim, who shared her reflections on trauma, the usefulness of PTSD as a clinical concept, and the complexities of working with imported, Western, terminology in the Palestinian context. Yoa’d Ghanadry-Hakim, a clinical psychologist and certified supervisor, is the head therapist at the Palestine Counseling Centre in Beit Hanina and head of the Arab Union of Psychologists. She is also a psychosocial and human rights activist.

Logo of the Palestine Counseling Centre

Peer Supervision Groups During Unprecedented Times

Dear Colleagues,

At this time, when humanity is struggling with the global crisis induced by Coronavirus, we as Palestinians dispersed all over the world are no exception - each of us is thrown into the mix, with our respective communities. As mental health professionals, we face this calamity, of an unfamiliar shape and an unprecedented scope, with no relevant tool sets and with no ability to foresee what the future might have in store. How are we, in the midst of our own overwhelm, to fulfill our mission as Palestinian mental health professionals? How are we to assist our people in processing the anxieties and horror that the illness evokes and in coping realistically, adaptively and self-protectively with this crisis?

We at the Palestine Global Mental Health Network see ourselves as obligated to take an active role in helping each other face the formidable challenges of this time period, through mutual support and peer supervision.

To this end, we are proposing to establish collegial peer supervision groups. The groups will be meeting remotely on Zoom. The first meeting will be dedicated to brainstorming, identifying the needs, getting to know the fellow participants and understanding the unique competencies each participant can bring to the table. Each group will be limited to 10 participants, to ensure that there is adequate space for each member to participate actively. All who are interested in joining are encouraged to email us at info@pgmhn.org.

مجموعة قراءه لكتابات فرويد

الزميلات والزملاء الأعزاء،

تطمح الشبكة الفلسطينية العالمية للصحة النفسية الى تعزيز التواصل والاثراء المهني المتبادل بين أبناء شعبنا في كافة أماكن تواجدهم. كما نرى أن الطريق للتحرر من الاحتلال وكافة أشكال الظلم تمر عبر التواصل مع الذات، من خلال توسيع الوعي والشعور. أحد أهم التوجهات في هذا المجال هو علم النفس التحليلي الكلاسيكي الممثل بفرويد، مبتكر العلاج النفسي التحليلي وهو أول من رأى أنه من خلال الكلام يمكن للانسان الشفاء والتغلب على عوارضه النفسية.

كذلك المحلل النفسي الفرنسي جاك لاكان، الذي رأى نفسه ملتزما للتوجُه والفكر الذي أسسه فرويد، وقد رأى لاكان أن للُّغَةِ دور محوري في معرفة اللاوعي واللاشعور.

نظراً لقلة الكتب في علم النفس التحليلي المترجمة بشكل جيد للُّغةِ العربية، ونظرا لكون هذه الكتابات مركبة ولديها ابعاد عديده، يصعب أحياناً الوصول إليها وفهمها من خلال القراءة المنفردة، قمنا بالمبادرة هذه لتكوين مجموعة قراءة في كتابات فرويد الأساسية، وذلك بتوجيه وتفسير المحلل النفسي خليل سبيت.

خليل سبيت، فلسطيني من مهجري قرية اقرث بالجليل الاعلى، يسكن مدينة حيفا، اختصاصي نفسي عيادي ومحلل نفسي يدير مركز هانتز الصغير بحيفا. عضو مسجل في المدرسة اللاكانية الجديدة ومحاضر في عدة برامج تعليمية عيادية، Psychotherapy. لهُ الكثير من المساهمات في ترجمة نصوص تحليلية للُّغة العربية. كذلك لديه دور مهم في إدخال علم النفس التحليلي وممارسته العملية في المدن الفلسطينية المختلفة، وذلك من خلال اعطاء الارشاد والتدريب للطواقم المهنية.


كل من يرغب في المشاركة بهذه المجموعة بإمكانه التواصل معي: منال ابو حق على info@pgmhn.org، أو على بريد الشبكة عبر الويبسايد.


. نتمنى الصحة والسلامه للجميع




دعوة للمشاركة في مجموعة ارشاد متبادلة لمواجهة وباء الكورونا

الزميلات والزملاء الكرام،

في ظل الازمة التي يعيشها العالم بهذه الأيام ونعيشها نحن كفلسطينيين في كافة اماكن تواجدنا في مواجهة وباء الكورونا، وفي ظل التحديات الغير مسبوقة التي نواجهها كمهنيين في مجالات الصحة النفسية في التعامل مع الوضع القائم وفي تقديم الدعم والمساعدة لأبناء شعبنا للتغلب على الخوف ولربما أيضا حالات الهلع، الى جانب توخي الحذر والتعامل بشكل واقعي وجدي مع الخطر القائم، نرى نحن في الشبكة الفلسطينية العالمية للصحة النفسية أنه من واجبنا أن نكون جنبا إلى جنب في مواجهة هذه التحديات وتقديم الدعم والإرشاد المتبادل في مواجهة هذه الأزمة.

لذلك نقترح في هذه المرحلة ان تقام مجموعة أولية للإرشاد المتبادل peer group supervision تلتقي عبر تطبيق zoom ويكون اللقاء الأول مكرس لعصف دماغ وتحديد الاحتياجات والتعرف على ما يمكن الاستفادة منه من خلال التجارب المهنية والانسانية لأعضاء المجموعة.

نظرا لذلك، ولإتاحة مجال لكل اعضاء المجموعة بالمشاركة الفاعلة نرى انه من الضروري ان لا يزيد العدد عن عشرة مشاركين.

كل من يرغب بالانضمام للمجموعة ولديه الاستعداد للعمل المتواصل والالتزام في حضور اللقاءات التي سيتم تحديدها في اللقاء الأول، أن يتواصل على البريد الإلكتروني لموقع الشبكة.